Episode Details
Back to EpisodesPut the OS back in OSDI
Season 1
Episode 13
Published 4 years, 6 months ago
Description
Oxide and Friends Twitter Space: September 6th, 2021
Put the OS back in OSDI
We’ve been holding a Twitter Space weekly on Mondays at 5p for about an hour. Even though it’s not (yet?) a feature of Twitter Spaces, we have been recording them all; here is the recording for our Twitter Space for September 6th, 2021.
In addition to Bryan Cantrill and Adam Leventhal, speakers on September 6th included Dan Cross, Josh Clulow, Tom Lyon, Simeon Miteff, Daniel Maslowski, Matt Campbell and Moritz. (Did we miss your name and/or get it wrong? Drop a PR!)
Some of the topics we hit on, in the order that we hit them:
- Adam’s tweets on recording Twitter Spaces.
- Tweet on recovering a recording!
- [@4:57](https://youtu.be/PVJfqjJJCkg?t=297) Timothy Roscoe’s Keynote
- Screenshots teasing his slides
- Conf video
- Complicated relationship with academia and industry
- [@8:09](https://youtu.be/PVJfqjJJCkg?t=489) Adam’s MS graphics experience
- Bryan’s USENIX 2016 keynote ~1hr: A Wardrobe for the Emperor – Stitching Practical Bias into Systems Software Research
- Conferences as the publishing vector for CS research
- [@13:47](https://youtu.be/PVJfqjJJCkg?t=827) What a modern OS does > … accreted and not designed.
> They were not designed, they congealed. - [@17:10](https://youtu.be/PVJfqjJJCkg?t=1030) Rob Pike’s 2000 “Systems Software Research is Irrelevant” paper
- The value of incremental improvements
- [@21:47](https://youtu.be/PVJfqjJJCkg?t=1307) Building on extant working components and interfaces
- Opaque, proprietary hardware
- AMD Platform Security Processor > Artifacts of the OS implementation tend to have outsized impact > on overall system performance
- [@26:27](https://youtu.be/PVJfqjJJCkg?t=1587) Performance is not the only axis of a system
- Security, malleability, convenience, reliability
- [@31:12](https://youtu.be/PVJfqjJJCkg?t=1872) Specialization
- [@37:02](https://youtu.be/PVJfqjJJCkg?t=2222) Open hardware and firmware
- ARM Cortex-M0 > That’s why we land at incrementalism, we ossify at some boundary. > And it’s very hard to change things on either side without moving in lockstep.
- Tom: The PC architecture was a great thing, but now the OS vendors have abdicated any knowledge of the hardware. Give us UEFI and we don’t care what happens beneath that.
- Should ARM have UEFI?